| Literature DB >> 32435209 |
Claudia Carmassi1, Katherine M Shear2, Martina Corsi1, Carlo Antonio Bertelloni1, Valerio Dell'Oste1, Liliana Dell'Osso1.
Abstract
Bereavement is the state of loss, determined in most of the cases by the death of a close person. It is probably the greatest sorrow that can occur in an individual life. Grief is a normal, healthy response to loss, evolving through stages in the process of mourning. In some cases, bereavement may lead to the outburst of manic episode: despite literature data being scarce, reports have explored this important clinical entity, variously called as "funeral mania" or "bereavement mania". We systematically reviewed the literature exploring the possible relationships between bereavement and the onset of a manic episode, both first or recurrent pre-existing episode, besides describing a case report on a manic episode in the aftermath of a loss event, with an accurate evaluation of prior mild mood spectrum instability, supporting the role of loss-events as potential risk factor for bipolar illness progression. This article tries summarizing existing evidence on the debate whether clinicians should consider mania as a possible bereavement reaction.Entities:
Keywords: bereavement; bipolar disorder; complicated grief; funeral mania; manic episode; manic onset
Year: 2020 PMID: 32435209 PMCID: PMC7218050 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart of study selection process.
Case report studies reporting first manic episodes in the aftermath of a significant loss in patients a) without any previous lifetime mood episodes or b) with previous depressive episodes only.
| A) PATIENTS WITHOUT ANY LIFETIME MOOD EPISODE | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Patient (gender) | Age (years) | Relationship with the deceased | Description | Treatment | |
| Index episode | ||||||
| Rickarby ( | Male | 55 | Son (killed) | Acute Manic episode followed by recurrent manic episodes yearly in the anniversary | Hospitalization: Neuroleptics and lithium | |
| Male | 25 | Mother | Acute Mania with psychotic symptoms | Hospitalization: lithium | ||
| Gill ( | Female | 49 |
Husband Mother (4 years later) |
Acute mania Acute Mania with psychotic symptoms |
Hospitalization: neuroleptics and ECT Hospitalization: neuroleptics | |
| Male | 46 |
Mother Father (2 years later) |
Acute Mania Acute Mania |
Hospitalization: no treatment data Hospitalization: no treatment data | ||
| Female | 24 | Father (suicide) | Acute Mania | Hospitalization: no treatment data | ||
| Morgan et al. ( | Female | 37 | Husband | Acute Mania with psychotic symptoms | Hospitalization: Neuroleptics | |
| Carmassi et al. ( | Female | 52 | Son | Acute Mania with psychotic symptoms | Hospitalization: Neuroleptics and mood stabilizers | |
| Rickarby ( | Female | 44 | Husband | Severe depressive episodes | Acute Mania | Hospitalization: lithium |
| Female | 21 | Father | Severe depressive episodes with following recurrences and periods of mood instability (no mania) | Acute Mania | Hospitalization: lithium | |
| Hollender and Goldin ( | Female | 44 | Son | Recurrent depressive episodes (the first occurring after the loss of her husband 3 years earlier) | Acute Mania with psychotic symptoms | Hospitalization: TCA and mood stabilizers |
| Ranga et al. ( | Female | 34 | Husband’s cousin | Recurrent major depressive episodes | Acute Mania with psychotic symptoms | Hospitalization: neuroleptics |
| Rosenman and Tayler ( | Female | 28 | Husband | Post-partum depression | Acute Mania | Hospitalization: no treatment data |
ECT, electroconvulsive therapy; TCA, tricyclic antidepressants.